3rd Grade Calendar

Sunday, December 20, 2015

Celebrating Winter

Just wrapping up the last day of school with some fun activities! We enjoyed a popcorn party, painted poinsettias, played boardgames, and ended the day with a music performance. Please remind your child to practice Xtra Math (xtramath.org) ten minutes daily and to read every day.  We'll see you back at school on Monday, January 4th. Happy holidays!
Click on the link below to read the latest article featuring the Class of 2025.
Class Of 2025: Winter Concert Celebrates Symphony Partnership



Poinsettias

Sharing treats and games together.




Thursday, December 10, 2015

Here's what's going on in 3rd grade this week:

Reading Learning Targets 


I can ask and answer questions as I'm reading a story


I can identify elements of a folktale



Math Learning Targets

I can determine when to multiply and divide in word problems


Writing

I can read an informational article, take notes, and form an opinion based on what I've read.



Tuesday, December 1, 2015

December Reading Logs

Tomorrow we'll be sending home reading logs for the month of December.  Remember that the most important home learning activity a student can do is to read for at least 20min per night.  Here are some guiding questions that you can use to discuss what your child has read.  Students can also use these questions to guide a written response to what they've read.  Thank you for supporting your child's learning by encouraging them to read every night!

December Reading Comprehension
Home to School Connection

Reading each night is the single most important task you can do to support and encourage ongoing learning at home.  We suggest 20-30 minutes of reading and another 5 minutes of discussion if possible

Here are some guiding questions for students to be thinking about during reading and for family members to ask after reading to encourage comprehension.  These are all based on the reading focus for the past month in our classrooms.

Retell:
-Who were the main characters?
-When and where did the story take place?
-What happened at the beginning? In the middle? At the end?
(use words such as first, then, next, after that, afterward,  last/finally)
-What was the problem?
-What was the solution?
-Did you agree with or like the solution to the problem?

If you could write the next chapter or a sequel to the book, what would you write?

Does this book remind you of another book you have read before or a movie you have seen? How are they the same and how are they different?

Compare and contrast two books with similar topics or by the same author. 

Can you infer what is going on if the author doesn’t directly tell you?

What are some text features you notice?  Bold print, table of contents, glossary, index, maps, charts, diagrams, captions, cut outs, comparisons, graphs, labels, headings…?